Category Archives: General

I’m A Snack!

Back when I was a kid, a snack meant, well, a snack. 

At our recent holiday gathering for the kids, I asked the young people to teach me some current slang so I could be a cool Mom, and they brought up a list of what the kids are saying now. One of the terms was ‘snack’ and this list indicated that ‘snack’ meant something slightly different in today’s (don’t-break-a) hip vernacular. According to the Urban Dictionary, they are correct:

Snack – 1. a snack is someone who looks good at the moment; 2. an attractive person; 3. an attractive female; 4. someone who looks so good you could eat them, not in an innocent way.

After reading that description, I jokingly decreed, “I’m a snack!” to which way too much laughter resulted, and a meme by Julia was born (I’ve finally been memed!) 

It was just an average night at home ~ being silly, painting our nails, talking about snacks ~ and it brought me into the Cool Mom’s Club, where I could be hip to the jive as I once was… though I fear it was a little closer to this classic ‘Mean Girls’ moment.

Whatever, I’m getting cheese fries. 

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Waking to the Winter Solstice

We have arrived at the first day of winter. 

Welcome.

Choosing to embrace the season rather than rail and rally against it has proven pivotal to finding a certain sense of peace and contentment. Such is the plan again for this year, when so much of the world reminds me of how shitty we can too often be. Escaping into the feeling of hygge, and finding the beauty and hope of each winter’s day will be key to making it through this wilderness.  It feels a little early to be posting a mid-winter song, but it’s bleak enough, so here you go:

Andy still thinks we will have a green Christmas, with rains scheduled for later in the week. Our tree just went up, so the holiday just gained a bit more light and cheer. Better late than never. Outside, it’s still a pretty picture, if a little chilly. It is now winter, after all.

There will be many more snow scenes yet to come, so if this round disappears it won’t be missed for long. The first few snowfalls are always welcome here; we will sing a different song come March. For now, I gaze wistfully at the snow nestled in the boughs of dogwood trees and pines, transported to the childhood times when snow transformed a forest into a magical world. 

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The Kids Who Found My Christmas Spirit ~ Part One

This is one of those rare sequels that may have been better than the original. Think ‘The Empire Strikes Back’ or, perhaps more fittingly this year, ‘The Godfather Part 2‘. In this instance, it’s the follow-up to ‘The Kids Who Saved Christmas‘, a post which itself had such a sprawling epic feel that it demanded its own second part

After the rather dour start to this Christmas season, a start that never really lifted me into the realm of Christmas cheer or seasonal spirit, I wasn’t thrilled to be heading to Boston to host another Children’s Holiday Gathering, hour or not, especially when my niece and nephew couldn’t even make it… but now I’m getting ahead of the story, so let’s start at the very beginning, a very good place to start…

For several years prior to COVID, I’d been hosting a Children’s Holiday Hour in Boston – where my friends with kids would be invited to visit (strictly for an hour, because that’s the kind of Virgo I once tried to be) have some hot chocolate, then explore the city in all its seasonal splendor. The fledgling event took place in 2015, and consisted of Suzie, Pat, Oona, Milo, Alissa and Sophia.The hour elongated into an afternoon, and the hot chocolate became snacks and sweets, and ultimately a take-out Thai dinner. 

Based on how well that first gathering went, the next year I invited the same group to make sure it wasn’t a fluke, and we had an equally-fun time. By year three (2017) of throwing this thing, it had its own rhyme and rhythm, though I was still extremely grateful when Kira agreed to join in that year’s festivities. It’s not easy to plan and set up these events alone. 

In 2018, the kids had started to save Christmas for me, lifting me out of the typical rut in which some of us adults kept finding ourselves at this most wonderful time of the year. When the world is screaming at you to be happy and joy-filled, and you’re just not, it conspires to kill all hope of holiday spirit. Still, I rallied and hosted and we all had a grand time. When my niece and nephew were old enough to join me on their own for the first time in 2019, it also happened to be the last time we’d have such an event before the pandemic hit. That visit was a happy one, especially as I finally had some family members of my own who were children and could join in this all-too-brief section of time when Christmas holds all the magic and wonder that it should.

During COVID, we took two years off, and I wasn’t sure I even wanted to do it all again. Planning and hosting an event for a possible group of nine adults and nine children, ranging in age from 9 to 47, in a tiny Boston condo, is not without a hefty dose of stress. Add to that the strains of the holiday season and everything else going on in this mad world, and I just wasn’t sure. But when you’re dining with Suzie on a beautiful fall afternoon and having such a fun time, you forget the work involved and end up sending out a text message inviting everyone to a Children’s Holiday Gathering in December. Absolutely no regrets. 

And there weren’t any – after two years of madness everyone wanted to reconvene, so everyone confirmed. My niece and nephew were on board, as were everyone else’s kids (and parents) so a full-house looked like a distinct possibility – the first in quite some time, and the prospect felt daunting. The Boston Children’s Holiday Gathering 2022 was on. As the days ticked away I kept waiting for the Christmas cheer to kick in, but it never did. Almost twenty people were about to descend upon our Boston home, and the person who set it all up wasn’t sure he was even going to show up…

…Leaves barbed like holly, berries poisonous too… 

{To be continued…}

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White Pre-Christmas Recap

The snow came, and before it arrived I had to make an unplanned, early trip to Boston in order to make it to the Children’s Holiday Hour (which I was hosting). But that will get recapped later this week – for now, there’s the week that came before. This is the final week before Christmas – this is when it all happens, and I’m finally feeling somewhat in-the-spirit. 

Holding the holiday line

3M: Madonna, Messiah, and Masterpiece

Season of snow.

A sneak peek of a holiday twist.

A Holiday Stroll with my husband – Part 1.

A Holiday Stroll with my husband – Part 2.

A silly little Christmas tree

Dazzlers of the Day included Jennifer Coolidge, Milo VentimigliaAtsuko Okatsuka, Billy Baldwin, Bad Bunny, and Dominic Albano.

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Holiday Stroll Sneak Peek

This year’s Holiday Stroll had a very special guest, as Kira was unable to join. Come back here tomorrow to see who it is, and how we strolled the merry streets of Boston to celebrate the Christmas season. It was a welcome return to a happy tradition, and one of my favorite people in the world was there to join me. 

Another holiday semi-tradition – the Boston Children’s Holiday Hour – will be taking place this weekend, as I haul my niece and nephew to that fine city by the sea for a gathering of some of my oldest and dearest friends. Having not seen most of these wonderful folks since before COVID, this will prove an interesting affair. Our lives have changed irrevocably during the past few years, and that has affected everything, and everyone. Most of their kids aren’t even kids anymore, soaring into their mid-to-upper teens, and skyrocketing beyond my height, so it will be quite a sight to see how we all fit into the small condo. If it can handle a party of fifty, as it once did in holiday times long ago, it can handle this crowd

As for the holiday stroll about to be recapped tomorrow, it was a lovely, if slightly subdued, excursion – fitting for these delicate times. See you then, I hope… in the meantime, some Christmas music to set off a Friday right proper. 

 

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Snow Season

My love of snowstorms was likely inherited from my mother, even if never voiced it until we were both adults. In our childhood, my brother and I loved snowstorms as much as any other kid, especially the way they gave the opportunity for a missed day of school. Back then, Mom and Dad were more concerned with shoveling and getting to and from work to enjoy them much, but in recent years Mom has explained how she loved being inside during a snowstorm, especially in the Boston condo

I think she always felt that way, as a snowstorm provided a pause in the hectic pace in our daily life. It suspended and arrested the non-stop velocity of a working mother’s many jobs, the way it stopped and stilled the world. Nature wins out in the end, and if the lesson is to slow down and inhabit the moment, the lesson will be learned, from one Mother to another. 

On a recent late-afternoon where one of the first snowstorms of the season arrived, my Mom and I were texting to see how the other was doing. It was almost evening, but the snowfall lent the night more light in that way of solace that makes up for winter being winter. The snow nestled into the outreached arms of the pine trees and dogwoods, which would hold until the winds arrived the next day. For all night and morning, the snow stayed this way – a beautiful way for winter to announce its impending arrival. 

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Holding the Holiday Line

This is the week when the holiday gatherings and celebrations begin in earnest, with office lunches and get-togethers on tap, and all of the social anxiety and distress that comes along with them. If history is any indication, this is when people tend to bring the drama, and understandably so – we are all taxed with extra burdens and told we should be having fun and enjoying the moment and the time together and bullshit, bullshit, bullshit… 

After several years of therapy and working on my own anxiety issues, I’m happily at the point where I can genuinely say (and mean) ‘Fuck it’ when things get to be too much, and I’ll step out of anything at any point in time as needed. People will simply need to be ok with that. Thus far, my close friends and family have always been fine with it, mostly because I haven’t made a huge deal out of anything. 

That said, there will be inescapable episodes where we don’t have the time or preparation to be ready for uncomfortable situations, and rather than stress or worry about it, I’ve adopted a better outlook and attitude when they rear their discomforting heads, one which embraces the imperfection of life, finding fun and laughter in the follies of what we as humans find ourselves doing at any given moment. When you consider what really matters, the friends and family we love, the rest of it doesn’t matter as much. Holding onto that levity and being flexible and open to new experiences are ways in which I’m staying calm amid the frenzy of holiday mayhem. It’s just the slightest tweak in how I’ve handled these couple of weeks leading up to Christmas, but it makes a world of difference. 

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Recapping a Return

When I abruptly turned off my online world last week, it came before we ever got around to a proper recap of the week, and then being off for a bit there was nothing to recap anyway, so here’s what may have been missed, along with what hasn’t been missed at all. Careful readers who follow along in these posts may note the arc of feeling down and dealing with the resulting issues during the holidays, something that has happened to me for many years but only now do I feel ok writing about it. There’s some progress there. More, hopefully, to come. Happy Mondaying to all who are taking part, as if we had a choice…

A cranberry sparkler mocktail just in time for the holiday season. 

Easing into evergreen season with a customary waltz.

Spending a morning with Dad.

The November finale tuckered me out, and as soon as I wrote that I realized how like my Gram I officially sound. 

While on the subject of getting old(er), this post was written right after I was awakened by the old man’s urge to take a piss before the break of day.

Turns out I’m not the only psychotic husband in this house

The frosty greenhouse.

A serious post disguised by Madonna and a saucy title: take a poll and ram it up your ass!

An act of solitude.

The mantra: comparison is the thief of joy. Just don’t do it. 

We need this nonsense now more than ever.

Find your own December home, wherever it may be.

A disappearance, an explanation, and the enjoyment of silence.

The Holiday Card 2022 and an offer you can’t refuse.

Wetting the red.

Behind the Godfather scenes, and a glimpse at his underwear.

Big cup or little spoon? Why not both instead?

Dazzlers of the Day included Jasmin Savoy Brown, Edison Fan, Aubrey Plaza, and Matt Rogers.

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Big Cup or Little Spoon

Perspective is one of those things we don’t think about enough, which is too bad since it informs so much of our world. Take this scene here: is this a regular-sized spoon and a super-sized cup? Is it a tiny spoon and regular-sized cup? Is it a big spoon and an extra-big cup and saucer? Maybe you don’t even notice it – I noticed it in person but it’s not quite translating as easily in these photos. I have to force myself to shift the perspective to see it as it truly was. 

That makes me question what the hell anyone gets out of this site and these ramblings. I try to take in all perspectives as I write posts, but I realize I have as many blind spots and missed possibilities as anyone else. We are largely imperfect that way. What I write in a somber and genuine tone may be read as sarcasm and snarkiness. What I put forth as silly and comical may be read with the utmost seriousness and drama. That makes communication difficult. 

There are ways to overcome this. Repeated exposure to my written style may give hints. Questioning intent and meaning adds understanding. And coming back with a deliberately-altered desire to read things in a different way helps change any pre-conceived perspectives or notions. I’ll keep those ideas in mind when writing things out too; assumption has made an ass of me many, many times. 

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Behind The Godfather Scenes

“He had long ago learned that society imposes insults that must be borne, comforted by the knowledge that in this world there comes a time when the most humble of men, if he keeps his eyes open, can take his revenge on the most powerful. It was this knowledge that prevented the Don from losing the humility all his friends admired in him.” ~ Mario Puzo, ‘The Godfather’

This post has a few outtakes from this year’s Godfather-themed holiday card, some not-quite-behind-the-scenes images that didn’t make the final cut but are perfect for updating my social media profile pics and annoying everyone who gets annoyed with a mustache. (Why all the ‘stache hate?)

This was a fun one to make – I love a photo shoot where I don’t need to wear pants. In order to get an approximation of the Marlon Brando profile, I had to jut my chin out (Andy later told me that when others imitated Brando’s performance in the film they would stuff cotton-balls in their mouths).

It turns out if you lower your jaw and stick your chin out, you naturally slip into Brando’s signature drawl, and while I contemplated shooting a video of me doing it, I’ll spare you that indignity.

I will not spare you a glimpse of the tighty-whities I donned for the unseen below-the-waist action. Going for something as authentic as possible for a card imitating a movie imitating a lifestyle, I’m not sure how authentic anything can be, and sadly I have no idea what the real monsters may have worn for their underwear-of-choice. These were chosen because I always thought the real Dons would be no-nonsense when it came to undergarments, and though Tony Soprano may have favored baggy boxers, I wanted the classic Don to be more streamlined and elegant, less rumpled and bunchy. These are the kind of painstakingly-detailed decisions one must make when producing the holiday card. 

Many people hate a mustache, so clearly I may have to go back to that for more. It’s not a set of grillz, but it seems equally bothersome, and for a trickster there is nothing more joyous than being bothersome. It’s our purpose in the world

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Red Wetting

Little pockets of nature can be found in the unlikeliest places, such as on this lunch-time walk which brought me past these landscaping shrubs, decked out in their seasonal garb and making the most of these sustained mild temperatures and damp weather. I like that they have decided to burn brightly in spite of the rain and December date. Defy it all. Resist. Persist. Exist. 

A wise woman once said that beauty’s where you find it. That leaves it partially up to the viewer as to whether or not beauty is to be found, and in a strange way whether or not beauty even exists. To know that we hold that in the palm of our hands is to know glory. What we make of it will be up to us. I choose to find it as abundantly as possible, even if that’s on a brief stroll through downtown Albany. 

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A Frosty Return

Perhaps you’ve noticed I took a couple days off from this website, and much of social media – or perhaps you are like most who didn’t notice a bit, save for the lack of the minor annoyance that my incessant posting has likely become. As a wayward teenager once wrote in a fledgling work, “Absence makes the heart grow fonder, but I can’t help but wonder if the word should be wander.” As November ended and December began, I sought out knowledge and wisdom in the quiet mornings, pulling back from friends who had pulled back from me, in the way that the universe piles on when things get dark. Even writing about what I thought ailed me failed to fix anything, and a therapy session yielded similar results. My daily meditation worked its temporal magic, and kept my heart calm, but shifts were afoot that felt like the culmination of the past three years. It is said that when you grow and change in certain meaningful ways, friends and family don’t always come along for the journey. For the most part, that’s not proven true for me, as I’ve had a pretty good collection of lifelong friends and family who have supported and loved me no matter what. Still, time changes things. A pandemic changes things. And in the world of madness that we’ve all experienced for the last three years, such seismic shifts and changes have revealed to me that there are little to no pillars of stability, and all those things that once felt so solid and true move into the past, further and further away, until they are only faded echoes, remnants that merely approximate what we once felt. 

This is what I mourn for now – the realization that our happiest memories cannot be repeated or kept going forever. It’s a lesson that’s been in the making for years. Maybe it’s just the final stage of growing up. I’ve watched traditions I’ve started and done my best to keep up slowly crumble – getting the family Christmas tree with my brother, a holiday stroll with Kira, and a litany of holiday parties and get-togethers with friends – and as they crumbled so too did the connections I once had with people who populated such integral parts of the past. Those people moved on, even as I tried in vain to keep some silly notion of tradition and ritual alive. I held onto such rituals as though they might keep us together. It was folly – noble and heartfelt folly – but still folly no matter how much love and fear was behind it. 

Coming to terms with that has taken a while, and in so many ways I’m only just awakening to it, so there’s still a long way to go. I rise in more subdued form these days, because disillusionment robs everyone of the stupid, happy energy that illusions inspire. Clarity is cold at first. Sharp, too. Without sacrificing all sentiment, I go through the days with a clinical and admittedly-calculated precision, designed to acknowledge the messy pain and hurt, to feel it and move through it by being present,  failing and faltering in my petty expectations and resentments, all in the service of letting go.

Because I know I must. 

A coating of frost on the front lawn catches my eye as the first beams of sunlight sparkle in reflection. It feels like a solemn morning, the way certain December days can in the lead-up to the holidays. Venturing out to examine the frost up close, I breathe in the brisk air, taking the moment for a little meditation first thing in the morning – to set the tone, to ease into the day, to inhabit the moment. The windless atmosphere is quiet – there is a calm that I will try to carry throughout the remainder of the day.

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December Home

It’s been difficult getting into the holiday spirit this year, and to be brutally honest I’m already over it. I’ve been feeling down lately, and the holidays haven’t done much to perk me up. I haven’t even brought out the decorations for the house yet, and there’s a good chance we may not do them this year. For whatever reason even that feels too daunting.

What a laughable privilege to claim that decorating for Christmas feels daunting. I hear it as I write it, and I don’t care. Such uninspired periods happen often in life – I usually just don’t document them, setting this blog and all social media on autopilot and turning on the public charm whenever in public. As we near this website’s 20th anniversary, however, there are simply no more fucks to give, nothing left to prove, and absolutely no need for polite pretend. 

So for the moment I’m going to coast on whatever holiday fumes make be left in this old battered engine. Surely there is enough residual energy to see us through to the next year. And if not, well, too fucking bad.

December
These are the things that I remember
And, so no matter what my fortune may be, or where I may roam
In December, I’ll be going home

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The Thief of Joy

There are many thieves looking to steal your joy. 

Negativity.

Jealousy.

Pettiness.

Hurt.

Hatred.

But of all the would-be criminals out to rob you of your happiness, one of the greatest and most insidious is the one with which most of us directly engage on a regular basis: comparison.

Comparison is the ultimate thief of joy

As soon as the mind posits something you have – a quality, a physical attribute, a possession – against something someone else has, you have created a perspective that immediately alters and shifts whatever your original appreciation of that something was. If it’s a possession, such as a car, which you might have originally loved and adored, the moment it is compared to another vehicle, it loses some of its luster, because from that moment on it is no longer just the car you loved – it’s the car you loved, in line in your mind next to whatever other car to which you may have compared it. Poof, joy altered – and, more often than not, joy diminished. 

If it’s a physical attribute, maybe the gray hair you once loathed but have learned to love, the moment you compare yourself to others is the moment some of the loathing returns.

And if it’s a quality – a spark of generosity perhaps – the moment you compare what you give to what anyone else gives immediately robs the moment of some of its altruistic intent, taking away the modicum of the joy that might have been present in the sole act of being generous. 

It’s understandable why we do it. Comparison is one of the first ways we learn of ordering the world and making sense of our placement here. It’s how we find our way in the daunting expanse of an endless universe that constantly threatens to overwhelm if you ever really got your head around its scope and reach. When you realize how small and minute we are in the entire universe, it’s a terrifying feeling. We must craft something to compare our stature and scale to what is around us or we would all be lost. To that end, comparison is helpful and useful. 

Beyond that, however, it begins to lead to heartache and distress, and ultimately the stealing of joy. Even if we come out on top, whatever that might mean, there is no true joy or happiness to be found there. The view may be lovely, but it’s usually lonely at the top. Shouldn’t our purpose be something greater?

One of the things I’m constantly working to improve is my automatic instinct to compare and contrast, seeking instead to simply appreciate each moment and decision, each action and movement, each goal and possession, in and of themselves. Taking care not to compare myself to others, making efforts not to compare what I have or don’t have against what others have or don’t have – these are noble endeavors, as I can see that comparison has never brought the happiness we think it will. 

Luckily, I’ve mostly been operating under such an outlook for a couple of decades. It started way back when I was first getting published in some magazines, and someone sent me an e-mail asking how they might get published. At first, I felt a slight pang of being threatened. My brain’s initial instinct was to shield and protect and guard against someone else taking my place somewhere. Soon thereafter, however, that impulse died away, and I laughed a little at my foolishness – first, at my silliness for thinking I actually occupied a space to be taken, and second at being so insecure to not offer what worked for me as a helpful guide for someone else. I ended up offering what my basic path had been (write, write, and write if you want to get published – seems so easy, but you’d be surprised how many people want to write for a publication or website yet don’t have a collection of their actual writing or, worse, haven’t written anything at all) and that change didn’t threaten or affect my own writing at all.

In fact, it illuminated something that would prove to be integral in how I have maintained my joy of writing all these decades later. My most enjoyable writing moments came not from getting published in forums that might edit or remove key components of what I was trying to convey; my love of writing existed solely in the act of writing. The instant I stopped comparing my writing to anyone else’s was the instant I realized the inherent joy I felt in the process.

The other far more important lesson learned in that exchange was the idea that absolutely no one else could do what I do. It was a genuine realization, not of hubris or arrogance or even healthy-self-worth – it was a realization for everyone: no one can do what I do in the same way that no one else can do what you do. We each operate in individual and unique ways. Even if we were to do the same exact thing in the seemingly same exact way, as humans we are each entirely one-of-a-kind, and every outcome would be slightly different. Every single one of us can state honestly at this very moment, and every moment, “Absolutely no one else can do what I do.” Say that to yourself and let it resonate in your head. It holds true for everyone. When you think of it in those terms, it makes comparison futile at best, and deleterious at worst. 

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An Act of Solitude

A solitary oak leaf flutters down on a tempestuous wind. Its oak tree of origin stands many yards away. I’ve always loved when the wind is like that, transporting objects through the air for great distances, and depositing them in yards where puzzled finders like myself happen upon them. Somewhere, and I haven’t even figured out where, a birch tree stands that has had its caterpillar-like strands of blossoms carried into our backyard, where no birch tree resides. It gives wonder to the world when we think we know it all. 

On this day, it’s the brown oak leaf that captures my rapt attention. One leaf among many that decided to jump into the wind, it does its quick dance before dropping to the ground. It joins its brethren, shades of brown upon brown, some of them torn and almost shredded, some mostly intact save for a few tears or holes, and some in various states of disintegration and degradation, never to be put back together again. The ground floor of fall is a tattered and largely broken collection of bits and pieces. So the earth gives and takes in its yearly cycle. 

The wind is strong and disagreeably unpredictable. It zigs when you are preparing for it to zag, and it appears when you least want it, wreaking havoc with dust in the eyes or the absolute worst parting of the hair. Impossible to navigate or manipulate, it is a cruel wind, tossing the grass heads here and there, bending them to its wayward will. There is no peace on this day. 

Even when the sun finally decides to appear, it barely makes a difference, and then it is gone. 

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